Mummy: The Resurrection: A What the What? Review

WHAT DO THE CHARACTERS DO?
They do good deeds in general to make the world a better place, and also fight
against the forces of Apophis, the adversarial corruptor. This is a little
unusual in that Mummy is part of the classic World
of Darkness setting which includes Vampire the Masquerade, Wraith
the Oblivion, and Werewolf the Apocalypse. All of those can be
relentlessly dark games, usually with the characters fighting internal
struggles rather than doing good. Even the most apparently “heroic” oWoD, Hunter
the Reckoning, is pretty damn dark. This is not- the atmosphere is one of
hope and battling for right combined with a certain degree of mysticism.

Each character has two previous lives- their existence as an ancient soul and
their modern life. The latter has died with some lack in their life- more
incomplete people in life rather than with some unfinished business. When they
die, they meet the soul and are offered the chance to return as an Immortal
servant of balance. If the GM decides to run a “prelude” for character
creation, they’ll run the player through than and the next stage of making a
pilgrimage to the Middle East to be invested with those powers and strengths.
The Amenti, also called the resurrected, gain powers in this process. There are
six major traditions of Amenti, each with different outlooks and a different
magical specialty. Rather than a large number of mechanical differences between
these “classes,” it effectively comes down to which magic they pay fewer points
for.

The magic of the Hekau paths defines the major abilities and powers of the
Amenti. They can also purchase various merits and flaws which make they better
than normal people. They can also return from the dead if killed; players can
invest in abilities to make that faster and more reliable. Mummies have to work
towards balance, ethical violations can impact their ratings. The legislated
morality of the game is tight, which may put some gamers off. But generally the
group ought to approach this more as a charitable superhero game. Players will
mix making the world better and fighting against baddies.

WHAT’S THE SYSTEM LIKE?
Yhe classic Storyteller
system, common to old World of Darkness games, powers Mummy: The Resurrection.
This uses a dice pool of d10s for actions. Most actions combine an attribute
and a skill rating (usually from 1-5) to provide a number of dice to roll.
Other ratings may substitute for those. Players have to match a difficulty on
each die to count as a success. Rolling more ones than successes causes a
fumble. The dice pool allows players to perform multiple actions with a
reduction in dice for each action. The system is relatively easy to pick up but
in practice has a high kludge factor. Every Storyteller campaign I’ve seen has
had different takes on what’s important and what gets ignored.

WHAT’S COOL AND UNCOOL ABOUT IT?
I like the mystical heroes concept. It feels like a dry run for Scion, where children of the gods
of various pantheons fighting against the Titans. This is a little lower-level
than that, but it has some really interesting talents. Those powers allow picks
on the various tracks- rather than being defined exclusively by five powers (as
often happens in WoD games). The system bolt-on here is light enough it could
be used for many different genres. The two hardcovers for this line are lovely
and well done. The interior art and layout really show WW at their best.
They’re definitely worth picking up for a collector.

On the other hand, some aspects of this game show WW at their worst. There’s
significant tie-in between the concepts of Mummy and the other game-lines,
especially Wraith the Oblivion. In some cases these are hints, in others
just confusing mentions. The core book has many details you’d have to be an
oWoD maven to actually put together. Beyond that, the game suffers from
voluminous obscure terms and definitions. That’s a running problem in classic
WW games (and often in those games which draw inspiration from them). Trying to
keep track of the concepts and details becomes a chore. Someone clearly has a
love of the obscure minutiae of Egyptian Mythology- and they don’t do a great
job making that workable and clear here.

WHAT’S THE CORE BOOK AND WHAT ELSE IS THERE?
The main book is Mummy: The
Resurrection. However it is not complete. In a move that foreshadows
their approach with the later World of Darkness, you need one of the main core
books: Mage, Vampire, Werewolf, etc. for the basic Storyteller system.
It isn’t a bad assumption to guess that most people picking this up will
actually know those mechanics. But it is a little odd that this point is only
spelled out ten pages into the volume (and not say on the back cover). There
was an earlier Mummy
book, but that should be skipped. This volume is complemented by the Mummy:
The Resurrection Players Guide. That’s definitely worth picking up if
you want to run this. It has new Amenti forms from other cultures, discussion
of what life’s like for the characters, new merits, powers, and other options.

M:tR was part of White Wolf’s Middle Eastern themed “Year of the Scarab,”
but the other products released for that really don’t relate (and one wasn’t
even released). The only additional specific support comes from scenarios for
the line in the World
of Darkness: Time of Judgment book. Other general World of Darkness
books (such as Combat)
offer generic resources but aren’t necessary. There’s a just completed
Kickstarter for Mummy: The Curse, a take on Mummies for the new World
of Darkness line.

WHO MIGHT LIKE IT?

Gamers with either a fascination with or solid knowledge of Egyptian Mythology

Gamers looking for a good model/example of how to do “magical crusaders” in
Storyteller with a compact rules set.

GMs who dig teaching their players a metric sh*t-ton of new concepts and terms.

Storyteller GMs looking for a new group or adversary for their campaign.

OVERALL
As a game Mummy has many cool ideas. I suspect to actually run it, I’d
have to strip away a lot of the Egyptian detail and material for the players.
While it is interesting, a little touch of the exotic goes a long way at the
table. I like that all of the core powers and options appear in two books. If
nothing else, it offers a brighter and shiner model for running a magicked-up
monster-hunter game using Storyteller.